Vaccination?

Typhoid (injection): you may donate blood if it was a preventive vaccination and you are symptom-free.
Typhoid (tablet): you may donate blood 4 weeks after vaccination.
BCG: you may donate blood 4 weeks after vaccination.
Mumps: you may donate blood 4 weeks after vaccination.
MMR (measles-mumps-rubella): you may donate blood 4 weeks after vaccination.
Cholera: you may donate blood if it was a preventive vaccination and you are symptom-free.
Diphtheria: you may donate blood if it was a preventive vaccination and you are symptom-free.
DTP: you may donate blood if it was a preventive vaccination and you are symptom-free.
Experimental vaccine: please contact the Blood Bank at 088-730 8686.
Yellow fever: you may donate blood 4 weeks after vaccination.
Flu (influenza): you may donate blood if it was a preventive vaccination and you are symptom-free.
Haemophilus influenzae: you may donate blood if it was a preventive vaccination and you are symptom-free.
Hepatitis A: you may donate blood if it was a preventive vaccination and you are symptom-free.
Hepatitis A after contact: you may donate blood 3 months after vaccination.
Hepatitis B or Hepatitis A + B: you may donate blood 2 weeks after vaccination. Hepatitis B vaccination after blood-blood contact (needle stick accident); you may donate blood again 4 months after the incident.
Rabies: you may donate blood if it was a preventive vaccination and you are symptom-free.
Rabies vaccination: if this is administered due to contact with an infected animal, you may donate blood again 1 year after vaccination.
Human papilloma virus (Gardasil): you may donate blood if it was a preventive vaccination and you are symptom-free.
Pertussis (whooping cough): you may donate blood if it was a preventive vaccination and you are symptom-free.
Measles: you may donate blood 4 weeks after vaccination.
Meningococcus: you may donate blood if it was a preventive vaccination and you are symptom-free.
Unregistered vaccine: you may donate blood 1 month after vaccination.
Pneumococcus: you may donate blood if it was a preventive vaccination and you are symptom-free.
Polio (injection): you may donate blood if it was a preventive vaccination and you are symptom-free.
Polio (tablet): you may donate blood 4 weeks after vaccination.
Rubella (German measles): you may donate blood 4 weeks after vaccination.
Tick-borne encephalitis (FSME): you may donate blood if it was a preventive vaccination and you are symptom-free.
Tick-borne encephalitis vaccination (FSME): after exposure (e.g. via tick bite) You may donate blood 1 year after vaccination.
Tetanus: you may donate blood if it was a preventive vaccination and you are symptom-free.